Louis
Keep
Title,
Knocks
Himself
Out of
Competition
—
.
.
_
_—____
H
KNOCKOUT-BUI
C
onn
li
es
flat
on the
canvas
after^kaV
punch°
Hrt*
i«T
W
v
'I*
,
elS
«
hth
r
°
Und
cf Ulsi
'
r
heavyweight championship
a
neulraI^
V
Jrner
*'
ReferCe
ElUlie Jose
P
h
waves
Louis
to
Conn
Not in
Condition
For
Fight,
Says
Referee
By
I
PAT
ROBINSON
International News Service
Spurts Wrilei
NEW YORK, June
20.—There's
one man in the world today who
knows
even betterthan-thefightersthemselves exactly
what
happenedin that Louis-Conn fight. That man
is the
referee, Eddie
Joseph.
Eddie
is an old
time heavyweight
%vho
fought
Gene Tunney, Billy
Brennan,
Bob Roper and
other
headliners
a generation
ago.
Eddie pulls
no
punches when
hetalks
so listen to what he has to
"That
was not
only
the
worst
title
fight
I
everrefereed
but itwas the
worst stinkeroo
I
eversa\v. And I sure
felt
sorry forthefellows who laid out a hun-lred
bucks
a
copy
for
their seats.
.
"The
fight
wasn'tworth'
two
bucks.
It
wasn't even
as
good
as
any of .the preliminary bouts and
they
were
no
bargain.
"I
wonder when
folks
will ever
learn
that
a
good little
guy
simply
can't beat
a good big
guy?
"I
don'tcare what
the
doctors
or
anybody else
may
say.
I sayBill
Conn was not in
condition.
Now don't five me a
song-
anddance about his heart
ami
pulse
and his
blood
pressure. I sayhe
wasn't
in propercondition
for
a
tough
fight
anil
I
knew
it as
soon
as I saw him step
into
the
i-eat
Dont
tell
me he was
s-hupe
to run a
marathon.
He
prob-ably
was.
So is Les MacMitchelland those other
great
track athletes.But those guys wouldn't be able togo 15
stiff
rounds.
That's
a
different
kind
of condition.
"I
knew
there was
something
wrong when
I
saw
those
circlesunder Conn's eyes.
I
don't knowwhether he was overtrained or not
but I do
know
he
wasn't
in
shapefor abattle
agufnst
one of thehardest punchers
the
ring
ever
suw.
"Joe took his lime End he
jabbed
Billy
silly. Thosewerethehardest
jabs
I
ever
saw. Every
one of
themwas just like being rammed with
a
pole. They hurt Billy
and
eventu-ally they began to
taku effect.
"I could see the
finish
cominglong before it happened.
Billy
wasslow. Maybe Joe was slower,
oo.
Butalthough
Joes
legs may
havegone
back he was
just
as
fast
as ever
with his hands.
And
it's
the
Hands,.not
the feet, that win
Champ
Wipes
Out
$100
Fight
Seats
By LAWTON
CARVER
International
Newt
Service Sports
Editor
NEW YORK, June 20.—Joe Louispeered
with
his slanty eyes out
of
the heavyweight jungles todayseeking
more
prey to
stalk,
and
found
only that he had
trade
atriple killing
in
knocking
out
BillyConn in eight
rounds
last night.
The
most enduring
olall
heavy-weight champions
preserved
histitle,
left
himself
no competitionfor the
immediate
future and wipedout perhaps for all time $100 seatsat prize fights.
He
also saved
a
spectacle orig-
inally
billed as boxing's
first$3,000,-
000,
gate from becoming a debacle
that
would have left
a
stench
in
pugilistic nostrils
for
years.
Old
Joe,
who was
supposed
to
be rusty and weary and slow
from
the
weight
of his 32 years and alapse into
inactivity
whilehe wasin the
Army,
still was young
enough
tocatchupwiththe
fleeing
Irishchallenger from Pittsburgh and tocut himdown withaquick,un-erring fusilade.With
that
he
gave
the
amazingly
smallturnout
of
45,2G6
paying
cus-tomersthe thrill and drama thatthey had
paid
$1.925,5G4
to
see,
making
it an
artistic success afterConn had convinced the YankeeStadium
throng
that
the price ofa ticket doesn't govern the qual-ity of a
boxing
match. A hundreddollars
looked
likea
dime for
seven rounds last night.LOUIS
OF OLD
This was the Louis of old
insofaras
you could
tell
by
watching
him.
He
moved with
all his
renowned,sleek,
leopard-like grace,
the
long,
pliant muscles of a
prizefighterflowing
beneath his tawny pelt ashe stalked Conn calmly, even laz-Louis shuffled
like
he always
did
in his purposeful,
big-footed
way, seldom
lifting
his
feet
from
Herald-Post
Sports
Page 12Thursday, June 20,
94C
Conn
Takes
Dancing
Championship
Anyway
By JOE WILLIAMS
NEWYORK, June
20.—Well,
1
must
still
stand
up
for
my palConn
and the
last time
I
looked
at him he
surely needed some
one to
standup for him.
You
see the
Pittsburgh
Adonis
was
under
the
misapprehension that
t
1
VB!
\?
dai
V
in
?
contest
and
tlle
Al>
th«r
Murray championship
was
at stake. No
one told my palitwas*
to be a boxing contest against avague character whom we'll
iden-tify
only as the
very
best in all theworld including
thatpart
which
Comrade
Gromyko
has put aside forhimself.What happened was
that
BOB
INGRUM
Commercial
League
Standard Oil defeated SeguroMcDonald Legion Post,
9-6,
andMomsen-Dunnegan-Ryan won
from
Checker Cab,
2fi-10,
in
Commercial
Softball
League gamesatGrand-view last
night.
Tonight's ChurchLeague .gamesatGrand
view:
Em-manuel
Baptist,
vs.Trinity Meth-
odist,
First Christian vs. HighlandParkMethodil.
ALSO
HOP HARRIGAN—FLYING
ACE OF THE
AIRWAYS
the
floor—bent
a
little
forward,
chin tucked into his brisket, his
eyes
glowing
and
hishands
cocked.
In the first
round when
Conn
laughed
at him and
said, "Take
it
easy,
Joe,
weve
got to go 15rounds," he
justkept
shuffling
in,landing a jab that was
softening
Conn up andreadyinghim for theinevitable
kill.
'INTERRED'
Conn
hadtemporarilyrelaxed hisguard to spit in the
eighthwhpn
Louis stabbed him in the
face
withthemost powerful leftjab
many
had ever seen.
Then
Louis smashedhisright hand to.Conn's
left
eye
nnd
ripped it
open
and
followed
the
wilting
challenger across
the
ring.
Conn
had
been
having his closecalls along
the ropes and in
thecorners all evening, but that prob-lemwas quickly settled now bya right, then a
left
hook and another smashing right, plus
som
lesser punches.Conn sprawled out
full
lengthand bleeding to be formally counted out in 2 minutes and 19 sec-onds of the round by Referee EddieJoseph and was thus properly, in
terred
as a heavyweight challenger.Up tothis timeof the sudden
finish
there
hadbeen fewer thana dozen good
pimches
landedandvirtually all of these by Louiswho lostonlythesecondand
thirc
rounds on Referee Eddie
Joseph's
card.my pal was victimized by the
evil
forceswhich stalkthe
shady
streets of boxing.
At
that
the
young
man got a
Mexican
stand off; he won the Ar-thur Murray
cup,
and
very
likelya job on the
maestro's
staff
where
us
genius will
be
appreciated,
buthe lost the
boxing contest.
I
be'lieve
any right thinker and decent sports-manwill agree that Conn
proved
o
b
e
the most
gifted
dancer
since
he
Castles,
though
perhaps
lacking
comparable stamina, especially
th;itof
the glass-fragile
Irene.
And
while
Ihave always
been
anadmirer
of the
character
who
seenvsto
be known variously as the
Brown
Bomber, the Dark Dynamiter and
J.
Louis
I
must charge
him
withtaking
cruel
advantage of his
hand-
some partner. At no time did
he
seem
to
have
the
proper
apprecia-tion or be willing to cooperate. Onthe contrary, he
seemed
stuffilyin-
45,266
Pay
$1,925,562
By
International
News
Service
NEW
YORK, June
20.—
Finan-
cial statisticsof (heLouis-Conn
bout:
Taiil
attendance
—15,266.
Gate(gross)— 51,935,562.Taxes— $385,113
federal, $96,218
state.Louis' share—
$577,699
(40
per
cent of
net).
Conn's
share—
5228,834
(20
per
cent of
net).
Promoter's
share.— $557,669
(plus
estimated $300,000
expenses).
The
Kid's
Last
Fight'
Bv
Ass
''.
Press
NEW
YORK, June
20.-Joe
Louis
still
has it.Billy Conn knows. Knocked
c
INDUCTION DELAYED
il
Associated Press
OKLAHOMA CITY,
June
20.—
Bob Fenimore,twicean All-Amer-icalootball
bank
for
Oklahoma
A. & M.College, probably
will
notbeinducted
into
thearmed
forces
foranother
month,
ifthen,it was
indicated
today when
a
state
cfraf'
appeals board meeting was
post-
poned. Fenimore,originallyde-
terred
because of an old
knee
in-jury, was placed in
!-A
this spring
nfter
a
special examination.
LOCO
soys
MAKE
GOOD..
in the
wost
deliriously
dirYerenf
since
"Buck
Privates'!
THE/R
DfCr
SHOW
graceful
swoops of my
pal.
.1UST A POOR SPORT
THATS
WHAT
LOUIS IS
Actually
it was
jealousy becauseabout midway in the contest,
or
in
the
eighth
round,
as the
sayina
.goes,
he battered my pal to the
bail
room
floor
withhisfists,his
fists
mind
you,
and
left
the
place. Itmust have been evident
to one and
all
that
he was
angry
and
piqued
because
by
this
time he
realized
he
could not dance as beautifully
ns
my
pal and he
quit
and
that
is
what
I
must
calla
poor sport, indeed.
I
"noticed,
too,
thatat
this
mo-
ment a great many people stood upand cheered.
These appearedto
havebeen people
who prefer
rudeness
to
ripplying foot rhythm and sincethey inhabit
a
rowdy
world
which
is
foreign
to my pal and
myself
who
are
unusually sensitive,
I de-
cided
to
listen
in on
their strangeremarks. Immediately I could
tel
they knew nothing about the
fine
art of dancing. One
terribly
offen-
sive person said:"Why all the little bum did
wa<
jump around and make silly faces.
1
That'sthe way it
went
amonj
these vulgarians. No.t
a
word abouthe dance;
all
about
the
boxingcontest. Such
as:
"The worst heavy-weight fight of all time and imaginethe promoter charging $100 a seat'
. . .
"they said this Conn
was
deadgame! Why, you could see he wab
scaredto
death
the
moment
he
cameinto the
ring.
If he was dead gamewhy didn't he throw a couple oipunches? All he did was
shadow
box
and he was
even
lousy
at
that
I
cannameyou 10guyswho can
take
him."
SAYS LOUIS
WANTEDPICTURES TO SELL
GOOD
Two other ill
bred boors
were
discussingsome obscure phaseof
;he
spectacle."Well,
I'll
give the
bum
credit
for
one thing:
he
didn't lose
his
head
.his
time.""Didn't lose his head. Why
when
Louis put the
finisher
on in the
eighth
I see the
bum's head goiu;
all
the way out to
center
field
line,
a fellow in the bleachers catches it
and
Larry MacPhail says
'keep
it.
lint's
the stadium's policy on
foul
Another
frightful
looking person
who
spoke
out of the
side
of his
noiith in sinister
sibilents
said:"Louis chills him in the first
heal
i he
wants
to.
With
one
punch,
no
ess.
You know why he don't don't
•ou?
Thepictures,the pictures,
ouis
sets
20 per cent of the pic-ures, so he'carries the bum justong enoughtomake 'em sell
Rood,
personally,
I'drather
see
Ferdinandhe
Bull."
Oh,
well,
let them say what
they
vill.
My
friend
Mr. Williams of theVorld-Tclegram
picked dear
little
"!HIy
to win and I'm sure he, tooad in mind the Arthur Murray
hampionship
because there is
prac-
ically
nothing
Mr.
Williams
does
ot
know aboutthe terpsichoreanrt.
And
there
is
absolutely
nothing!
eknows
about
the
brutal
practice
-
prize
fighting.
Bless
his
benutifiiJ
cuts
across
hislef
clioek
and nose,
Conn
sat 'smiling
on
a rubbing table deep
urdr
Yankee
Stadium
last
night and de-
clnred
with solemn
finality
thahe would
never
fight
again.
Ramirez May
Join
Dorados
'•La
Tuza"
Ramirez.
'
Ten-eon
pitching
ace last
season,
is reported
to
b
e
r
eady
to
join
the Chihuahua
<-ity
Dorados,
who
open
a
four-game Mexican National League
series
against the Juarez
Indians,today
in Juarez.Augustin Verde, recently deposedas manager of the
Saltillo
teamwas signed as manager of the
Sari
Luis team in the Mexican Leagueaccording
to
another report received
here.
Fortis
Beat
Bliss
Team
Forti All-Stars
defeated
First
Guided Missiles of Ft. Bliss
16-7
n
a
baseball game
at
Dudley
Field
last
night.
Frank Prieto
hurled forthe Fortis, allowed eight hits, fan-ned 15
men.
Portugal and Reyeswere the
hitting
stars with
three
hits each.
•The
All-Stars return to AlpineSunday for
a
doubleheader with theAlpine Internationals.
C^TANDINGg
NationalAmerican
W.
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W.
L.
Pet.
Brooklyn
34 21
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Boston
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42 15 737
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Results
St.
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21
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LOU
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BRENDA JOYCE JACQUELINE
deWIT
ELENA
VEROUGO
MARYGORDON GEORGECLEVELAND
STARTSSATURDAY
-:-
PLAZA
-:
MATINHSa.lS
NGHTS «:15
L
DOORS
O>£N
HOUR
EARtlER
Safeway,
Mesa
Wm
Safeway
Stores
defeated Alamito
j
Grocers,
9-4,and
Mesa
Bowl
won i
'mm
the
City Cleaners,
21-15, in jJames
last
night
in the
Commer-
i
cial Softball
League
at
Memorial
\
Park. Major League games for to-
night
at Memorial: Cottage Cafevs. AARTC and Ft Bliss Civiliansvs.
Searchlight Detachment.
Conn
Develops
New Punch
A NEW PUNCH WAS born toboxing
last
night. Maybe
it's
des
lined to take its
place
in
pugilism'
,
hall
of fame along with
BobFitzsimmons
solar
plexus
blow withwhich
he
knocked
out Jim
Corbett
Bob
Dunphy,
who did an excel
lentjob on theblow-by-blow
de
scription over
the
radio, called
i
a leg
feint.Conn, said Dunphy
several
timesfeinted with
his
left leg,
or
maybe
itwashis
right leg, hoping
to ge
the
shuffling
Louis
off'
balanceConnused the
maneuver
so manytimes that KROD
listeners
mighthave started wondering if Billy wasgoing to wind up kicking the cham-
pion.
He probably would have donebetteranywayhad heworn boxing
gloves
on his feet
instead
of
hit,
hands.
Man
VersusBoy
AS ONE WHO HADnearlyal-ways
previously
subscribed to thetheory that one ought to
stick
with
the
chanlpion until
hes
beat-en, I
fell
off the Louis bandwagonat
the
wrong time.
Not
in a
sour
grapes
vein,
1
must
say
that
!t didn't
take muchcourage to bet on Louis. It was
good,
common
sense,
too.
Thesmart money boys had Louis 18-5atfighttime. They- seldom
go
wrong.Buttiierewas asprinklingofexperts, including
Jack
Detnpsey,
Joe
Williams, Vincent
X.
Flaherty
of
the Los Angeles Examiner,who
picket!
Conn. Williams anilFlaherty hy knockouts. All of
them
saw (he
fighters
train.
Theyweren't impressed
by the
Bomb-
er's
training
a week
or
so
before
tlie fight.
But it is evident
thatLouis wound up his work very
sharp
antl thatif
he
did
look dull
at anytime, lie was still goodenough to take Conn.Damon Runyon wrote one ofthebestof the pre-fight
articles.His
idea
was
that they
were
sending a bay out to
tlo
a jobagainst
a
man.
And
that
wastheway it
sounded
over the radio.
Glove-Touching
SOME
MAY
ATTACH
quite B
bit of significance to the
fact
thatthe -two fighters touched gloves at
the
start
of the eighth round.
This
little
ceremony in boxing is al-ways
reserved
for the time whenthe
fightei-s
come out of their
cor-
ner for the
final
round.
Those
quick to see somethingnefariousin every big heavyweight
bout
maycomparethe Louis-Connglove touching with the picture of
Jack
Johnson lying
on his
backand shading his eyes
from
the hotCuban
sun in the
2Gth
round
of
hisbout with
Jess
Willard.It probably was an absent-mind-ed gesture on the part of Connand Lous. Louis
might
have takenit easy in the early rounds, forone thing, to protect the value ofthe fight pictures, but it probablywas a shooting match in everyrespect. Louis was just too
good
andrightnow itlooks likehe canholdhis title for another
if
he wants to.nine years
Unions to PiayLa Mesa
at
Dudley
Union Shoe Shop
)
co-leader
in
theInternationalBaseball League,willplayLcMesa
at,
8 p.m., today
it
Dudley Field.
Trucks
Hope
Of
TigersAgainst Sox
By United
Press
NEW YORK,
June
20.—There
may be plenty of trucks coming
off
the assembly line today in De-troit, the nation's motor capital,but the world champion
Tigers
havegot a streamlined one who is defi-nitely not for sale—Virgil (Fire)Trucks.Trucks, the only man in majorleague history who won a Wo^ld
Series
game without
scoringany
.victories
in the
regular
season,was
beginning to give the Tigers hopeagain
that,
they may still have achance
to
catch
the
runaway
Red
Sox.Yesterday
he
turned
in his
best
effort of
.the .v*ar, a 3 to 0 seven-hitter against
-vhe
Athletics at De-troit. He st'-uok out nine, and only
three
batters got as far as third
base.
Indians' Sale
Seen
Certain
Bv Vnilrd Press
CLEVELAND, June
20. —
Presi-
dent Alva Bradley
cf
the ClevelandIndians apparently is
resinned
tothe sale of the team as 17 stock-holders probably will receive todaytheterms under which it
will
besold.
•
Their dedcision
to-
sell
to BillVeeck
Jr.,
ormer
owner
of-the
Mil-waukee
Brewers,
was expected tobeunanimous.
The
price
tag was
reportedto beupwards
of
$1,500,000.
Caracalla
II
Wins
Ascot GoldCup Race
Bv
International
jvetcs
Sscuicf
ASCOT,
Eng.,
June
20. — TheFrench-bred favorite, Caracalla II,won the Ascot Gold Cup
race
today.
Hard Hitters
Win
El
Paso Colored
Hard
1
Hitters
r'.jfeated
La
Union
Indians,
12-8,
in
a baseball game yesterday. Brown
fanned
eight batters for the HardHitters.
•
Breadon
in
Mexico
for
Pasquel
Talk
By
United
Press
MEXICO CITY.
July
20.—Owner
Sam Breadon
of the St.Louis
Card-
inals,
reportedly
bearinganolive
branch
from
the major
leagues, .was
ready to meet with Mexican LeaguaPresident
Jorge
Pasquel
todayto
discuss a plan whereby future
raids
on
American teams would be stop-ped.
/
Breadon's presence
here
was
con-
firmed
by a personal
representa-tive
of Pasquel, who said that the
S.
Louis club president
had
madearrangements for the conferencelast week.One possibility still was not
dis-
counted,
that he might be on hand
in
an effort'to
retrieve
the
threestar
players
who
jumped
his
club
to
go to theMexican League nearlya month ago.
If
he was
here
seeking to
per-
(
sjadeace
Pitchers
Max Lanier and
red Martin and Infielder Lou
Klein
to return to the
Cardinals,
chances
are
that
he had
conferred
with
Baseball Commissioner A. B.
(Happy)
Chandler
and that ha
might
also be extending an invi-
tation
to"comeback—all isfor-
giver
"
to
other recalcitrant
r.^ajor
r
leaguers
who
jumped south
of the
\
border.
/
Flowers
Makes
Tyler
Start
Okey Glowers, who until recent-
ly
was a
member
of the El
Pasopitching
staff,
made his bow with
Tyler in the
East
Texas
League last
_
night
against Sherman, Although
..Tyler
won, 9-6,
Flowersdid not
finish
the game. He was
relieved
by
Gulp.
Joe
Rossi, former
El
Pasobackstop,did the catching forTyler.
Fabsns
Wants
Game
Fabens
team of the Valley Base-ball League wants a game for Sun-day. Arrangements
may be madsby
calling
Fabens 58.
r
BOWL
FOR FUN AND
HEALTH
at the
MESA BOWL
609
N.
Mesa
Ave.
League Games
will
bi
held here
throughout
the
cominy
season
Bowl Here. Keep
Fit.
'Bowling
Lanes
Operated
by
Bowlers
for
Bowlers"
INTERSTATE
RIDE
HORSEBACK
•
For
Health
<
For
Relaxation
•
.ForPleasure
Chuck
IViijrnn
Supper
K
v
e
y
Sunday
N
i
x
111
ii::m
r M. .
Ride
f^ye
milesdown
(he rive r F
-\
a delicious
sUak—Dance
tn tuneful
c o
w
h
o y o r r h e
s
ra,
S:UH»
Hnrscback
—
S'Mlit
ChuckwaconHooiilirht
r
Hides
—
Mnnday
Sights
Walcrmelnn FmsL
S'-'.no
Jtc&crvalions
must
ho
made
'il
hour*in
advauct.
Chuck
Waffnn
Hroakfasu
A
mi
need
on
KpqucstFor Special
1'artfes
STEVE GAMBLIN
r.ocalccl: O. C. Hal! Hoarding SUbles
N'orlh
1.ODD
Anil
A
i
me
da
Plionr
Main
(HiH'
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James
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RANDOLPH SCOTT ANN RICHARDS
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1:00—2:45
4:.
n
,0—0:20—8:05
&
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40c
Til G
T.
M
Slie Challenges
Men
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OF
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RTS
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Today
r.Oc
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6 P. M.
BRIDE
OF A MAD KILLER!
The Ncver-To-Be-Forgotten Story Of A Lovely Girl
At
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Plus: Community
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I'RI.:
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PALOOKA,CHAMP"
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"BOY
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spojfracorT"*"
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